Third Mexican journalist killed in March
The shocking murder of a investigative journalist in the northern city of Chihuahua has again focused attention on the precarious nature of the profession in Mexico.
The shocking murder of a investigative journalist in the northern city of Chihuahua has again focused attention on the precarious nature of the profession in Mexico.
If you imagined drugstore chain Farmacias Guadalajara was confined to the metropolitan area or its surrounding localities, nothing could be farther from the truth.
On Monday, March 20, Mexico marks the birth of Benito Juarez, one of the nation’s most respected presidents.
Volaris, Mexico’s fastest growing domestic airline, has been forced to cut some of its scheduled flights inside and outside the country due to the “Trump effect.”
Despite talk of a border wall, the Mexican government has no intention allowing the country to retreat into a shell and is eager to move ahead with plans to ensure that all of its children are taught English from an early age.
Established sports journalists in Mexico are furious after an investigation revealed that a director of a Mexican newspaper stole the jersey worn by New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady in Super Bowl XLIX.
Expectations of toned-down rhetoric originating from the White House in the coming months (as President Trump’s reset Tuesday suggests) could switch the front-page emphasis in Mexico from bilateral to domestic issues – in particular the crucial upcoming election in the Estado de Mexico, this country’s most populous state.
The Mexico Tourism Board has announced that a record-breaking 35 million international visitors traveled to Mexico in 2016, representing a growth of nine percent compared to 2015.
The majority of the country’s practicing Catholics initiated Lent by attending church on Ash Wednesday (Miercoles de Cenizas)